Met to Merge With Neue Galerie in 2028, Preserving Ronald Lauder’s 2001 Museum
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 14
Met to Merge With Neue Galerie in 2028, Preserving Ronald Lauder’s 2001 Museum
5 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 14
2028 will bring a rare museum merger: the Metropolitan Museum of Art will absorb the nearby Neue Galerie and rename it the Met Ronald S. Lauder Neue Galerie.
Ronald S. Lauder, 82, said the deal is meant to protect the Neue’s identity after his tenure, citing the Met’s preservation of the Cloisters as reassurance.
The Neue, opened by Lauder in 2001, is known for its 20th-century Austrian and German holdings, including Gustav Klimt’s "Woman in Gold."
Max Hollein, the Met’s director and a 20-year Neue board member, called the merger a chance to safeguard both a major collection and the museum’s distinct setting.
Can the Met preserve the Neue Galerie’s intimate charm, or will a treasured “jewel box” just become another wing of a mega-museum?
With masterpieces born from Nazi theft, how will the Met’s new role as custodian reshape the global fight for art restitution?
Is this merger a new blueprint for securing a founder's legacy, or does it signal the end for smaller, specialized museums?